The fact that Aurender runs Linux makes changing the system difficult but I have managed the following.

Convert a 220v unit to 110v for US service and back the other way is relatively easy. A few wiring changes.

Upgrade boot and SSD music cache from 120GB mSATA to faster and larger 256GB mSATA is possible but not for the novice.

Upgrading 2TB HD to 4TB now. 2TB units have their 2nd drive pins omitted so to go larger you can’t add a second drive. Need to replace the smaller drive with a larger one. Needs to be formatted or cloned to conform to Linux.

I’d never try it with an N10 but I was fortunate to buy a 220v N100h cheap. There just fancy computers. I knew it contained a dual voltage transformer so adapting it to US voltage was easy. The Linux operating system makes it more difficult to play with boot discs and hard drives but with a little research I was able to clone the boot drive and copy the HD partition to a larger hard drive.

It’s been a while, I’ll need to pop the top off of mine. Have a swim meet to go too. Can it wait until later today?First, confirm your wiring configuration.I remember the 220v version had 4 positions on the input side of the transformer. Going left to right I designate them wire position 1,2,3,4If I recall there is a wire from the plug going to position 1 and 4. A jumper wire bridges positions 2 and 3Correct?

Ok, the input at 220v has 4 wires. The din connector has 7 slots only 4 are actually wired. Slot 1 Black, Slot 7 White and a Bridge wire connecting slots 3 and 5. Correct? Looking from back going left to right on the Din connector.

Transformer should be Amgis S8/L01-6371

Conversion to 115v.

Black wire to Slot 3 ( looking from the back left to right)White wire to Slot 7

Even the DM000 model has a failure rate of 2-3.5%, which is still very high. Interestingly enough, the HGST hard drives are very reliable.

This has been a known problem in the industry when the hard drive manufacturers started pushing out hard drives in excess of 1TB (such as 2TB, 4TB, etc.). The 1TB has been the largest drive that still retained the reliability of the older drives. Obviously, this was not a well published fact as vendors are still pushing larger drives and consumers just want bigger and bigger as time goes along.

If you study this chart, make sure to look at the "drive count" column. Even though Toshiba may appear to have a 0% failure rate, 45 drives is not a good enough sampling for this.